^I just don't see Wesley as being in the group that gets special treatment despite public outcry. I know what you're saying, but ...I don't know that the IRS is going to look the other way like LA prosecutors do. For instance, Willie Nelson, the IRS didn't care he was famous.

^^Yeah, but Wesley has celebrity name status, and that usually carries a lot of weight. Plus, if a jury decided this case then that explains it all, since juries don't really like sending celebrities to jail, ex: O.J., Robert Blake, and Phil Spector.

Snipes 'should serve three years'

Snipes 'should serve three years'

Snipes starred in films such as Blade, Passenger 57 and Demolition Man

Film star Wesley Snipes should spend three years in prison and be fined $5m (£2.5m) for tax evasion, US prosecutors have said.
The actor was found guilty in February of failing to submit tax returns, although he was cleared of more serious charges, including fraud.
Prosecutors have now recommended that he faced the maximum penalty for a "brazen defiance" of US tax laws.
The Blade star will be sentenced on 24 April. He was not available to comment.
In court papers filed on Monday, US Attorney Robert O'Neill pressed for the maximum penalty because, he said, the case provided a "singular opportunity" to "deter tax crime nationwide".
"For nearly a decade, Snipes has engaged in a campaign of criminal tax conduct, combining brazen defiance with insidious concealment," a US Department of Justice statement said. 'Fraudulent harm'
"Snipes has escaped paying more than $15m (£7.6m) in income tax to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), and has pursued an intended fraudulent harm to the United States Treasury of more than $41m (£20.8m)."
At his trial in January, lawyers for the film star admitted he had been "dead wrong" and should have to pay the money back.
But they denied any crime had been committed, saying Mr Snipes had been open with the government about what he was doing.
"Disagreement with the IRS is not fraud of the IRS, is not deception," argued defence lawyer Robert Barnes.
The actor's first role was in Goldie Hawn's 1986 American football comedy Wildcats, and he later appeared in the video for Michael Jackson's Bad, which was directed by Martin Scorsese.
He also appeared in hit films such as White Men Can't Jump, Passenger 57 and the Blade trilogy.